{"id":787,"date":"2020-01-28T17:03:37","date_gmt":"2020-01-28T22:03:37","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/blogs.law.columbia.edu\/critique1313\/?p=787"},"modified":"2020-01-28T17:07:54","modified_gmt":"2020-01-28T22:07:54","slug":"maximilian-ringleb-hannah-arendts-the-human-condition","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/blogs.law.columbia.edu\/critique1313\/maximilian-ringleb-hannah-arendts-the-human-condition\/","title":{"rendered":"Maximilian Ringleb | Hannah Arendt\u2019s <em>The Human Condition<\/em>"},"content":{"rendered":"<p><strong>By Maximilian Ringleb*<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>Hannah Arendt, one of the greatest political theorists of the last century, repeatedly insisted that she was not a philosopher. In an interview with G\u00fcnter Gaus in 1964, Arendt specified that the term political philosophy, in her opinion, involved an inherent contradiction: While, for instance, the natural philosopher saw nature essentially from the same position as every other human being and could therefore make some general claims about nature, the philosopher can never maintain this neutral position in regard to politics.<a href=\"#_edn1\" name=\"_ednref1\">[i]<\/a> Moreover, she continues, political philosophers of the Western tradition since Plato\u2014except for such rare instances as Kant\u2014all represent essentially the <em>same <\/em>and therefore a particular, non-neutral <em>philosophical<\/em> attitude toward politics. As a political <em>theorist<\/em>, on the other hand, Hannah Arendt attempted to analyze politics and society \u201c<em>mit ungetr\u00fcbten Augen<\/em>,\u201d with unclouded eyes, an attempt which is probably best represented by her central work <em>The Human Condition.<\/em><a href=\"#_edn2\" name=\"_ednref2\">[ii]<\/a> About six decades after its publication in 1958, we want to reread and discuss Arendt\u2019s <em>chef d\u2019oeuvre <\/em>in the 9<sup>th<\/sup> session of Critique 13\/13\u2014can <em>The Human Condition<\/em> provide us with analytical concepts and insights to understand our current political moment?<\/p>\n<p>The first chapter, titled just as the whole book\u2014<em>The Human Condition<\/em>\u2014reveals the full scope of Arendt\u2019s project: To withdraw the evaluation of politics from the structurally biased realm of political philosophy and conduct a more neutral and nuanced analysis from the perspective of political theory. Arendt believes that already with the trial of Socrates, this birthplace of Western political philosophy, the tradition of political thought took a particular ideological standpoint which it never dislodged. After the shock of his teacher\u2019s execution, Plato, Arendt claims, had \u201cno aim other than to make possible the philosopher\u2019s way of life.\u201d<a href=\"#_edn3\" name=\"_ednref3\">[iii]<\/a> Since this way of life was, as Socrates mode of existence had overtly revealed, \u201cthe essentially speechless state of contemplation,\u201d<a href=\"#_edn4\" name=\"_ednref4\">[iv]<\/a> Plato initiated the triumphal march of an inherently unpolitical (<em>apolitia<\/em>) political tradition throughout Western history\u2014the preaching of the <em>vita contemplativa<\/em>.<a href=\"#_edn5\" name=\"_ednref5\">[v]<\/a><\/p>\n<p>Hannah Arendt\u2019s main concern is not so much the philosophies of the <em>vita contemplativa <\/em>or its modern reversal as such but primarily their underlying \u201cassumption that the same central human preoccupation must prevail in all activities of men.\u201d<a href=\"#_edn6\" name=\"_ednref6\">[vi]<\/a> These activities are fundamentally three: \u201clabor, work, and action,\u201d<a href=\"#_edn7\" name=\"_ednref7\">[vii]<\/a> which together form the <em>vita activa<\/em>.<a href=\"#_edn8\" name=\"_ednref8\">[viii]<\/a> \u00a0Of these three, the cycle of labor and consumption is \u201cthe least worldly [\u2014because the least durable\u2014] and at the same time the most natural of all things.\u201d<a href=\"#_edn9\" name=\"_ednref9\">[ix]<\/a> Indeed, natural phenomena such as the water cycle or the carbon cycle illustrate that nature does not \u201cknow neither birth nor death\u201d<a href=\"#_edn10\" name=\"_ednref10\">[x]<\/a> but follows a cyclical process. As Arendt puts it delicately, \u201c[i]t is only within the human world that nature\u2019s cyclical movement manifests itself as growth and decay.\u201d<a href=\"#_edn11\" name=\"_ednref11\">[xi]<\/a> Human has to address the cyclical condition of <em>life <\/em>by engaging in a continuous process of laboring and consuming. Fortunately or unfortunately,<a href=\"#_edn12\" name=\"_ednref12\">[xii]<\/a> as Marx observed, human can escape from this biological necessity at least temporarily since their labor power exceeds the mere level of subsistence by a surplus essential for fertility, this fundamental \u201cforce of life.\u201d<a href=\"#_edn13\" name=\"_ednref13\">[xiii]<\/a><\/p>\n<p>This surplus provides human the opportunity to address the dilemma of their existence, living a mortal life within the \u201cever-recurrent cyclical movement of nature.\u201d<a href=\"#_edn14\" name=\"_ednref14\">[xiv]<\/a> It is through work that human, as <em>homo faber<\/em>, \u201cconducts himself as lord and master of the whole earth\u201d<a href=\"#_edn15\" name=\"_ednref15\">[xv]<\/a> by disrupting the cycle of nature and using its matter in order to produce durable and therefore unnatural but <em>worldly<\/em> objects.<a href=\"#_edn16\" name=\"_ednref16\">[xvi]<\/a> The \u201cstability and solidity\u201d of these objects primarily serve the \u201cfunction of stabilizing human life\u201d within the cyclical, anonymous currents of nature.<a href=\"#_edn17\" name=\"_ednref17\">[xvii]<\/a> They provide an anchor, so to say, to preserve a continuous human identity.<a href=\"#_edn18\" name=\"_ednref18\">[xviii]<\/a> As their durability usually exceeds an individual lifespan, producing such objects additionally provides an opportunity to transcend one\u2019s personal mortality and reach a considerable degree of worldly immortality thereby meeting the second human condition: <em>worldliness<\/em>.<\/p>\n<p>Besides life and worldliness, the third fundamental human condition is <em>plurality<\/em>, since \u201cmen, not Man, live on the earth and inhabit the world.\u201d<a href=\"#_edn19\" name=\"_ednref19\">[xix]<\/a> While <em>homo faber <\/em>\u201cis fully capable of having a public realm of his own\u201d<a href=\"#_edn20\" name=\"_ednref20\">[xx]<\/a>\u2014the exchange market\u2014, interactions on this <em>market<\/em> are primarily directed by products rather than by human, a phenomenon \u201cwhich Marx denounced as the dehumanization and self-alienation of commercial society.\u201d<a href=\"#_edn21\" name=\"_ednref21\">[xxi]<\/a> Consequently, only a third activity, namely action and speech, can meet the human condition of plurality through individual distinction\u2014not simply regarding personal abilities to craft certain objects but \u201c<em>qua <\/em>men.\u201d<a href=\"#_edn22\" name=\"_ednref22\">[xxii]<\/a><\/p>\n<p>Since action is always concerned with the <em>in-between<\/em>, \u201cthe \u2018web\u2019 of human relationships, with its innumerable, conflicting wills and intentions,\u201d<a href=\"#_edn23\" name=\"_ednref23\">[xxiii]<\/a> it has two inherent pitfalls: irreversibility and unpredictability.<a href=\"#_edn24\" name=\"_ednref24\">[xxiv]<\/a> The trial of Socrates, revealing the unbounded dynamics and consequences of action, was therefore a decisive moment marking \u201cthe traditional substitution of making for acting,\u201d<a href=\"#_edn25\" name=\"_ednref25\">[xxv]<\/a> at least in theory. Since Plato, political philosophy became primarily concerned with finding ways to \u201c[e]scape from the frailty of human affairs,\u201d to \u201cescape from politics altogether.\u201d<a href=\"#_edn26\" name=\"_ednref26\">[xxvi]<\/a> But Hannah Arendt disagrees decisively: As plurality is a fundamental human condition, a complete retreat into the <em>vita contemplativa <\/em>is ultimately unhuman. Emphasizing the teachings of Jesus of Nazareth, Arendt presents an alternative: In order to act, it requires courage to deal with its inherent consequences\u2014however, these frailties of action can be addressed with deeply human means: Forgiveness and promise. While Arendt draws on the teachings of Jesus of Nazareth to defend action, one should note that her ideas are quite distinct. Hegel described accurately that the life of Jesus took a clear turnaround once he realized that action would not result in change and he consequently retreated into a severe <em>vita contemplativa.<\/em><a href=\"#_edn27\" name=\"_ednref27\">[xxvii]<\/a> Arendt is aware of this fact in that she criticizes Jesus\u2019s preaching of love:<\/p>\n<p>Love, by its very nature, is unworldly, and it is for this reason rather than its rarity that it is not only apolitical but antipolitical, perhaps the most powerful of all antipolitical human forces.<a href=\"#_edn28\" name=\"_ednref28\">[xxviii]<\/a><\/p>\n<p>In other words: Unlike Christianity, Arendt does not believe in the power of love but only in <em>respect<\/em>, which together with courage and the remedies of forgiveness and promise becomes her leitmotif for action.<\/p>\n<p>While the pre-Socratic \u201cGreek solution\u201d<a href=\"#_edn29\" name=\"_ednref29\">[xxix]<\/a> of the polis did not recognize the importance of forgiveness and promise, Arendt still draws heavily on the Ancient city-states to illustrate a different conception of society based on an action-dominated <em>viva activa<\/em>. The most striking feature of the Greek case is its clear opposition of the private and the public spheres. The <em>household<\/em>, on the one hand, provided both a worldly place of belonging based on private property and a place to labor for one\u2019s necessities of life. It is due to these functions of the private household to meet both the conditions of worldliness and life that the Greek city-states were societies of property-owners and of slaves. Freedom, in the Greek context meaning to be liberated from life\u2019s necessities by exploiting the labor surplus of one\u2019s slaves, enabled for the participation in the <em>polis<\/em>. Not believing in a transcendental life or eternity, the <em>polis<\/em> was the Greek platform to acquire worldly immortality by aiming to achieve remembrance of one\u2019s actions and speeches in the web of human relationships.<a href=\"#_edn30\" name=\"_ednref30\">[xxx]<\/a><\/p>\n<p>This Ancient form of an action-dominated society following the <em>viva activa<\/em> was eventually challenged not only, as said, by the earliest political philosophers, but also by the Christian conception of <em>individual <\/em>immortality. Both the <em>viva contemplativa <\/em>and individual immortality downgraded political action \u201cto the low level of an activity subject to necessity.\u201d<a href=\"#_edn31\" name=\"_ednref31\">[xxxi]<\/a> The medieval and premodern centuries consequently resulted in a decisive shift from action to unworldliness, a shift which was paradoxically conducted by <em>homo faber<\/em> who was convinced with Plato that \u201chis greatest desire, the desire for permanence and immortality, cannot be fulfilled by his doings, but only when he realizes that the beautiful and eternal cannot be made.\u201d<a href=\"#_edn32\" name=\"_ednref32\">[xxxii]<\/a><\/p>\n<p>It was only with Galilei, who separated Being and Appearance by proving with worldly means the heliocentricity of the sun system and therefore the fallacy of all objective \u2018truth,\u2019, that the <em>viva activa <\/em>eventually saw a revival during the early modern period. At this point in history, \u201cscience and philosophy parted company more radically than ever before\u201d<a href=\"#_edn33\" name=\"_ednref33\">[xxxiii]<\/a> and as philosophy, being stuck early on in doubt and an inescapable relativism of all thought and experience, retreated into introspection, science became the dominating force of the early modern period. The foremost advantage of science in the modern age of doubt was its pragmatism: \u201c[S]cientific truth not only need not be eternal, it need not even be comprehensible or adequate to human reason.\u201d<a href=\"#_edn34\" name=\"_ednref34\">[xxxiv]<\/a> Consequently, one could only know what one had made oneself\u2014not what one thought or observed in contemplation\u2014, and the new means to create knowledge\u2014and not truth, which was forever lost\u2014was the experiment.<a href=\"#_edn35\" name=\"_ednref35\">[xxxv]<\/a> <em>Homo faber<\/em>, the maker of things, was therefore \u2018reactivated\u2019\u2014but as \u201cthe scientist made only in order to know,\u201d<a href=\"#_edn36\" name=\"_ednref36\">[xxxvi]<\/a> <em>homo faber\u2019s <\/em>activity was now \u2018processualized,\u2019 they became \u201ca maker of tools to make tools.\u201d<a href=\"#_edn37\" name=\"_ednref37\">[xxxvii]<\/a> Within this self-serving process of empirical knowledge accumulation, however, scientists eventually realized the relativism of the world they were constructing as well, since \u201cthe world of the experiment [\u2026] puts man back once more [\u2026] into the prison of his own mind.\u201d<a href=\"#_edn38\" name=\"_ednref38\">[xxxviii]<\/a><\/p>\n<p>At last, the initial doubts of early modern philosophers turned out to be of greater foresight. With Galilei\u2019s prove of the Archimedean point\u2019s relativism, the resulting Cartesian doubt and ultimately with the loss of faith in any form of immortality, \u201cmodern man at any rate did not gain this world when he lost the other one. [\u2026] The only thing that could now be potentially immortal [\u2026] was life itself.\u201d<a href=\"#_edn39\" name=\"_ednref39\">[xxxix]<\/a> Equating Life and Being, the modern life philosophy of Marx, Nietzsche, and Bergson dissolved the Archimedean point altogether. As a result, \u201cindividual life became part of the life process, and to labor [\u2026] was all that was needed.\u201d<a href=\"#_edn40\" name=\"_ednref40\">[xl]<\/a> In today\u2019s world, the <em>animal laborans<\/em> finally came to dominate the <em>viva activa<\/em> and established what Arendt calls the laborer\u2019s society. The modern predominance of the natural cycle of labor and consumption \u201chas let loose an unnatural growth [\u2026] of the natural,\u201d<a href=\"#_edn41\" name=\"_ednref41\">[xli]<\/a> a process which strives for an abundance of wealth which can only be achieved in a continuous acceleration of the cycle and an ever-increasing productivity of labor, leaving no space for meaningful work, political action, or individual contemplation whatsoever. We have given up on the fundamental human conditions of worldliness and plurality, creating a society in which the individual is perfectly fungible and all that matters is the immortality of a species in an ever more artificial environment. What Hannah Arendt diagnosed and foresaw so clearly about sixty years ago is in its contemporary validity shocking\u2014what she proposed, however, \u201cis very simple: it is nothing more than to think what we are doing.\u201d<a href=\"#_edn42\" name=\"_ednref42\">[xlii]<\/a> In our coming discussion of Arendt\u2019s work in Critique 9\/13, we will indeed follow her advice\u2014it remains open, however, whether the discussion will come to more specific conclusions in light of the ever-more revealing character of the modern laborer\u2019s society.<\/p>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ednref1\" name=\"_edn1\">[i]<\/a> The interview \u201cZur Person Hannah Arendt,\u201d conducted by G\u00fcnter Gaus on November 28, 1964, is available at <a href=\"https:\/\/www.youtube.com\/watch?v=J9SyTEUi6Kw\">https:\/\/www.youtube.com\/watch?v=J9SyTEUi6Kw<\/a>. Arendt explains the contradiction of political philosophy at 2:36.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ednref2\" name=\"_edn2\">[ii]<\/a> <em>Ibid.<\/em>, at 4:05.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ednref3\" name=\"_edn3\">[iii]<\/a> Hannah Arendt, <em>The Human Condition<\/em>, Second edition (Chicago\u202f; London: The University of Chicago Press, 2018), 14.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ednref4\" name=\"_edn4\">[iv]<\/a> Arendt, <em>The Human Condition<\/em>, 302.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ednref5\" name=\"_edn5\">[v]<\/a> This triumphal march was secured first by the continuance of the \u201cphilosophic <em>apolitia<\/em>\u201d in Aristotle\u2019s political philosophy, who distinguished between the quiet and the unquiet, which \u201cis like the distinction between war and peace: just as war takes place for the sake of peace, thus every kind of activity, even the process of mere thought, must culminate in the absolute quiet of contemplation.\u201d Although Jesus Christ did not\u2014at least initially\u2014preach the <em>vita contemplativa,<\/em> the Christian tradition eventually adopted the concept when the medieval scholastics, particularly Aquinas, incorporated the recovered writings of Aristotle in the Christian teachings. In this way, Plato\u2019s ideas dominated far into the early modern ages.<\/p>\n<p>Arendt, <em>The Human Condition<\/em>, 15.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ednref6\" name=\"_edn6\">[vi]<\/a> Arendt, <em>The Human Condition<\/em>, 17.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ednref7\" name=\"_edn7\">[vii]<\/a> Arendt, <em>The Human Condition<\/em>, 7.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ednref8\" name=\"_edn8\">[viii]<\/a> Each of these activities can be interpreted as an immediate response of human to the conditions of his existence: with <em>labor<\/em>, human responds to the condition of his biological existence, of <em>life<\/em> as such; with work, they attempt to account for the seeming <em>worldliness<\/em> of this processual biological existence by creating durable products which provide some degree of \u201cstability and solidity;\u201d and with action, human try to distinguish themselves in correspondence to the condition of <em>plurality <\/em>within human communities.<\/p>\n<p>Arendt specifies later that meaningful action\u2014unlike mechanical action or violence\u2014is fundamentally interlinked with speech: \u201cWithout the accompaniment of speech, at any rate, action would not only lose its revelatory character, but, and by the same token, it would lose its subject, as it were; not acting men but performing robots would achieve what, humanly speaking, would remain incomprehensible.\u201d Arendt, <em>The Human Condition<\/em>, 178.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ednref9\" name=\"_edn9\">[ix]<\/a> Arendt, <em>The Human Condition<\/em>, 96.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ednref10\" name=\"_edn10\">[x]<\/a> Arendt, <em>The Human Condition<\/em>, 96.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ednref11\" name=\"_edn11\">[xi]<\/a> Arendt, <em>The Human Condition<\/em>, 97.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ednref12\" name=\"_edn12\">[xii]<\/a> Surprisingly, Arendt sees the existence of labor\u2019s surplus primarily critically as becomes apparent at the beginning of section 16 on page 118. However, her perspective is more ambiguous than it seems at first sight: While she regards the \u201cfertility of human labor power\u201d as an unfortunate feature since it resulted in the division of labor and ultimately slavery in which some human had to labor in order to fulfill the necessities of all, she is also aware that without labor\u2019s surplus there would not be any opportunity for human to engage in the other activities, work and action.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ednref13\" name=\"_edn13\">[xiii]<\/a> Arendt, <em>The Human Condition<\/em>, 108.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ednref14\" name=\"_edn14\">[xiv]<\/a> Arendt, <em>The Human Condition<\/em>, 96.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ednref15\" name=\"_edn15\">[xv]<\/a> Arendt, <em>The Human Condition<\/em>, 139.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ednref16\" name=\"_edn16\">[xvi]<\/a> These objects are reifications of individual ideas and, at least in their most artistic manifestations, can serve as ends in themselves. More specifically, Arendt describes \u201c[t]he process of making [as] entirely determined by the categories of means and end. The fabricated thing is an end product in the twofold sense that the production process comes to an end in it [\u2026] and that it is only a means to produce this end.\u201d Later, however, she distinguishes art works, \u201cwhich are strictly without any utility\u201d and therefore \u201cthe most intensely worldly of all tangible things\u201d from objects which serve a certain function and therefore \u201cnever become[] [\u2026] an end in itself, at least not as long as it remains an object for use.\u201d Since useful objects serve human purposes, only an anthropocentric world view, defining human \u2018convenience\u2019 as the ultimate end of all means, can provide a meaningful context to produce use objects. This \u201canthropocentric utilitarianism of <em>homo faber<\/em>\u201d is perfectly compatible with his general world view, as they conduct themselves, as said, as the lord and master of the world.<\/p>\n<p>Arendt, <em>The Human Condition<\/em>, 143, 153, 155, 167.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ednref17\" name=\"_edn17\">[xvii]<\/a> Arendt, <em>The Human Condition<\/em>, 136-7.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ednref18\" name=\"_edn18\">[xviii]<\/a> It is only logical and worth to note that Arendt recognizes the central importance of private property as such an anchor to preserve identity and to meet the human condition of worldliness. For her, private property is \u201ca tangible, worldly place of one\u2019s own\u201d and consequently, \u201c[i]n a society of property-owners, as distinguished from a society of laborers or jobholders, it is still the world, and neither natural abundance nor the sheer necessity of life, which stands at the center of human care and worry.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>Arendt, <em>The Human Condition<\/em>, 70, 115-6.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ednref19\" name=\"_edn19\">[xix]<\/a> Arendt, <em>The Human Condition<\/em>, 7.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ednref20\" name=\"_edn20\">[xx]<\/a> Arendt, <em>The Human Condition<\/em>, 160.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ednref21\" name=\"_edn21\">[xxi]<\/a> Arendt, <em>The Human Condition<\/em>, 210.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ednref22\" name=\"_edn22\">[xxii]<\/a> Arendt, <em>The Human Condition<\/em>, 176. As she puts it later in the text: \u201cIn acting and speaking, men show who they are, reveal actively their unique personal identities and thus make their appearance in the human world.\u201d Arendt, <em>The Human Condition<\/em>, 179.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ednref23\" name=\"_edn23\">[xxiii]<\/a> Arendt, <em>The Human Condition<\/em>, 183.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ednref24\" name=\"_edn24\">[xxiv]<\/a> In another context, Arendt even identifies a \u201cthreefold frustration of action\u2014the unpredictability of its outcome, the irreversibility of the process, and the anonymity of its authors.\u201d Arendt, <em>The Human Condition<\/em>, 220.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ednref25\" name=\"_edn25\">[xxv]<\/a> Arendt, <em>The Human Condition<\/em>, 220.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ednref26\" name=\"_edn26\">[xxvi]<\/a> Arendt, <em>The Human Condition<\/em>, 222.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ednref27\" name=\"_edn27\">[xxvii]<\/a> Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel, \u201cThe Spirit of Christianity and Its Fate,\u201d in <em>Early Theological Writings<\/em>, trans. T. M. Knox (Chicago: The University of Chicago Press, n.d.), 182\u2013301. On page 283: \u201cSo long as Jesus sees the world unchanged,\u00a0 so long does he flee from it and from all connection with it.\u201d<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ednref28\" name=\"_edn28\">[xxviii]<\/a> Arendt, <em>The Human Condition<\/em>, 242.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ednref29\" name=\"_edn29\">[xxix]<\/a> Arendt, <em>The Human Condition<\/em>, 192.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ednref30\" name=\"_edn30\">[xxx]<\/a> See Arendt, <em>The Human Condition<\/em>, 197.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ednref31\" name=\"_edn31\">[xxxi]<\/a> Arendt, <em>The Human Condition<\/em>, 314.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ednref32\" name=\"_edn32\">[xxxii]<\/a> Arendt, <em>The Human Condition<\/em>, 303.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ednref33\" name=\"_edn33\">[xxxiii]<\/a> Arendt, <em>The Human Condition<\/em>, 272.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ednref34\" name=\"_edn34\">[xxxiv]<\/a> Arendt, <em>The Human Condition<\/em>, 290.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ednref35\" name=\"_edn35\">[xxxv]<\/a> See Arendt, <em>The Human Condition<\/em>, 295.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ednref36\" name=\"_edn36\">[xxxvi]<\/a> Arendt, <em>The Human Condition<\/em>, 297.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ednref37\" name=\"_edn37\">[xxxvii]<\/a> Arendt, <em>The Human Condition<\/em>, 309.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ednref38\" name=\"_edn38\">[xxxviii]<\/a> Arendt, <em>The Human Condition<\/em>, 288. One should be reminded here of Max Horkheimer\u2019s essay on traditional and critical sciences, discussed in Critique 1\/13.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ednref39\" name=\"_edn39\">[xxxix]<\/a> Arendt, <em>The Human Condition<\/em>, 320-1.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ednref40\" name=\"_edn40\">[xl]<\/a> Arendt, <em>The Human Condition<\/em>, 321.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ednref41\" name=\"_edn41\">[xli]<\/a> Arendt, <em>The Human Condition<\/em>, 47.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ednref42\" name=\"_edn42\">[xlii]<\/a> Arendt, <em>The Human Condition<\/em>, 5.<\/p>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p>*M.A. Global Thought<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>By Maximilian Ringleb* Hannah Arendt, one of the greatest political theorists of the last century, repeatedly insisted that she was not a philosopher. In an interview with G\u00fcnter Gaus in 1964, Arendt specified that the term political philosophy, in her&hellip; <a href=\"https:\/\/blogs.law.columbia.edu\/critique1313\/maximilian-ringleb-hannah-arendts-the-human-condition\/\" class=\"more-link\">Continue Reading <span class=\"meta-nav\">&rarr;<\/span><\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":2166,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"_monsterinsights_skip_tracking":false,"_monsterinsights_sitenote_active":false,"_monsterinsights_sitenote_note":"","_monsterinsights_sitenote_category":0,"footnotes":""},"categories":[38981],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-787","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-resources-9-13"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/blogs.law.columbia.edu\/critique1313\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/787","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/blogs.law.columbia.edu\/critique1313\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/blogs.law.columbia.edu\/critique1313\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/blogs.law.columbia.edu\/critique1313\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/2166"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/blogs.law.columbia.edu\/critique1313\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=787"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/blogs.law.columbia.edu\/critique1313\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/787\/revisions"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/blogs.law.columbia.edu\/critique1313\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=787"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/blogs.law.columbia.edu\/critique1313\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=787"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/blogs.law.columbia.edu\/critique1313\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=787"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}